Rogeria tonduzi Forel 1899

Formicidae, Hymenoptera, Insecta, Arthropoda, Animalia

worker lateral view

worker face view

Range

Costa Rica, Guatemala. Costa Rica: widespread in wet forest areas, from sea level to 1200m.

Identification

Erect hair moderately abundant, flexuous, with little or no underlying appressed pubescence; petiole clavate, without distinct peduncle and node; eye with 39-48 facets; propodeal spines long; mesosomal dorsum with thick wavey rugae; WL 0.81-0.90mm.

Notes

Kugler (1994) reported collections by Longino from Corcovado National Park, including numerous foragers from the ground and low vegetation, a worker in a nest of Cyphomyrmex salvini, and another at the base of a tree amongst Pheidole workers. Longino twice collected workers at extrafloral nectaries of Passiflora pittieri in Corcovado. L. Garling collected a nest at La Selva Biological Station: a "tubular entrance with white 'fuzz'" in a cacao tree. New collections by Longino reported here are Winkler samples from Carara, Hitoy Cerere, La Selva, Monteverde (1100m on Pacific slope), Turrialba, Sirena, and San Vito. At La Selva, Longino observed a lone queen low on a tree trunk at night.

Additional Images

Worker: mesosomal dorsum, SEM (reduced, original); lateral view, SEM (reduced, original);
Queen: lateral view (reduced, original); face view (reduced, original);

Literature Cited

Kugler, C. 1994. Revision of the ant genus Rogeria (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) with descriptions of the sting apparatus. Journal of Hymenoptera Research 3:17-89.


Page authors:

Grant Ramsey, The Evergreen State College, Olympia WA 98505 USA.

John T. Longino, The Evergreen State College, Olympia WA 98505 USA.longinoj@evergreen.edu

Charles Kugler, Radford University, Radford VA 24142 USA.


Date of this version: 23 July 1998
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